Lego Cyberpunk City Created by by the BroLUG team, inspried by the 1982 movie Blade Runner. Awesome. The full picture set, here.“It’s a cyberpunk display, near future city, Japan-esque,” says one of the BroLUG team in the video below, continuing, “There’s a joke running that we were trying to use every color possible in the display. … we’ve got scala pink, sand blue, and some other weird ‘80s, ‘90s colors.”

In a preview of this week’s Cosmos episode, Neil deGrasse Tyson explains the vast difference between weather, which is what we notice, and climate, which is global and changes gradually -usually. And he has an awfully cute dog out on the beach with him.

A Chinese man and his four-year-old son are apparently stuck in South Korea because his son used his old man's passport as a drawing book. Now the dad stuck in South Korea now because of "unrecognizable documentation" and authorities have warned it is likely he won’t be able to travel home with his son, and the rest of his party. The picture was originally posted on social networking site Weibo by the father, known only as Chen, alongside a plea for help.

Kai Lin, a designer and student from Brooklyn, developed Klippa, a prosthetic leg for rock climbers. To make Klippa a functional tool, Lin interviewed climbers and examined how their legs move. He determined that a climber's leg needs easily replaceable rubber, an elastic pivot point, and a small contact surface with the rock.

Kangaroo Light(on kickstarter) is a portable, playful and flexible lighting product designed to fit inside your bag. It glows only when needed so you can easily locate your belongings avoiding wasting time and possible frustrations. It was originally designed to fit inside your bag so you can easily locate your belongings, but I think I could find lots of other fun uses for it.

"Pencilism" created by Miami-based artist Federico Uribe, an array of sculptures made out of colored pencils. He uses colorful pieces of fragmented pencils, sometimes held together with zip-ties, to create sculpted landscapes, animals, paintings, and even three-dimensional human figures.

Directed by Dave Sowerby, we'll see Danny take his riding back to the roots of trials riding, exploring the forgotten town of Epecuén in Argentina, a location that has been submerged for the majority of the past 25 years

The most iconic songs of summer by year for the last one hundred years, by Philip Niemeyer for The Boston Globe. The full pic after more."Travel through the last 100 years to discover which summer songs were either released or peaked in popularity during the summer of their respective years. Some are about the summer or the stuff of summer: parties, picnics, fleeting love, nostalgia or fun. Some have that summer feeling in sound alone. Many are relevant to their times. Some have become standards. Some annoy, like a sticky day with too many mosquitoes. Others slow down time, like an unexpected breeze one hopes will never stop."

In the first international trailer for Sony's upcoming movie version of the '80s TV show The Equalizer. The original television series ran from 1985-89, and starred the late Edward Woodward – in a Golden Globe-winning role – as Robert McCall, a g-man turned private detective, who spent his days helping out the weak and under-priviledged in an effort to make up for past dark deeds.

China Radio International reports, a Chinese farmer from Hunan province, has spent the last ten years of his life developing a suitcase that also serves as a motorized personal transportation vehicle. It goes up to 12.5mph.

'Robot Reference Guide' is a reference guide that shows well-known pop culture robots from movies, television shows, and comics. Created by Science Bob. Big pic!"There’s something about robots that people connect to. I knew as soon as I left the theater after watching Star Wars that I would someday have my own R2-D2, (which I now do!) So I decided to ask the followers of my Facebook Page to tell me their favorite robot, and I got a huge response. Below are some of the favorites, and the approximate time that they made their first appearance. I included cyborgs (robotically modified humans) as well as some real robots that were mentioned."

Google just unveiled its latest autonomous car, it doesn't have a steering wheel, accelerator pedal, or brake pedal...With a top speed of 25 MPH, buttons for start and stop, and a screen that shows the route."We’re now exploring what fully self-driving vehicles would look like by building some prototypes; they’ll be designed to operate safely and autonomously without requiring human intervention. They won’t have a steering wheel, accelerator pedal, or brake pedal… because they don’t need them. Our software and sensors do all the work. The vehicles will be very basic—we want to learn from them and adapt them as quickly as possible—but they will take you where you want to go at the push of a button. And that's an important step toward improving road safety and transforming mobility for millions of people. "